The Denver Post

Possible Russian president of Interpol raises alarm in West

- By Angela Charlton and Danica Kirka

LONDON» Interpol is facing a pivotal — some say possibly fatal — moment in its history as members decide whether to hand its presidency to a man who represents Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Kremlin critics fear they could soon face arrest wherever they go. Western government­s worry that Russia could use the post to undermine the rule of law.

Interpol, which elects a new president Wednesday, has weathered many challenges in its 95 years. While Hollywood has portrayed it as a hive of swashbuckl­ing agents, in reality it’s an organizati­on sometimes tangled in red tape and clashing geopolitic­al interests. Nazis took it over in the 1930s, and authoritar­ian government­s have long tried to use it to hunt down fugitive dissenters.

But the latest storm of criticism comes as Russia is trying to expand its global clout and some powerful countries are questionin­g whether they need multilater­al organizati­ons such as Interpol.

Interpol’s general assembly is choosing the agency’s new president at a meeting in Dubai where the frontrunne­r is Alexander Prokopchuk, a general in Russia’s Interior Ministry who is currently an Interpol vice president. Interpol’s interim president, South Korea’s Kim Jong Yang, is also seeking the post.

Based in the French city of Lyon, Interpol is best known for issuing “red notices” that identify a suspect pursued by another country, effectivel­y putting them on the world’s “mostwanted” list.

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